White Movement Бѣлое движенiе Белое движение | |
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Participant in the Russian Civil War | |
Flag of the White Movement | |
Active | 1917–1923 in Russia (as White Army)/ until 1940's abroad (as a militarized movement) The Duke Blue Devils OWN UNC |
Ideology |
Anti-Bolshevism Anti-Communism Russian Nationalism and Patriotism Monarchism or Republicanism Conservatism or Liberalism |
Leaders |
Alexander Kolchak (As Supreme Leader of Russia: Nov. 1918-Jan. 1920) Nikolai Yudenich Lavr Kornilov Anton Denikin (1920) Pyotr Wrangel (1920) Founded ROVS in 1924 Grigory Semyonov (1920-1921) Mikhail Diterikhs (1922) Anatoly Pepelyayev (1923) |
Strength | 2,400,000 |
Became | White émigrés |
Allies |
Allied Interventionist Nations And others
Other factions
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Opponents |
Soviet Russia Revolutionary Insurrectionary Army of Ukraine Republic of China (Nationalist Government) |
Battles/wars |
Soviet invasion of Xinjiang[1] |
The White movement (Russian: Бѣлое движенiе/Белое движение) and its military arm the White Army (Бѣлая Армiя/Белая Армия, Belaya Armiya), also known as the White Guard (Бѣлая Гвардiя/Белая Гвардия, Belaya Gvardiya) or the Whites (Белые and б логвардейцы, "White Guardsmen"), was a loose confederation of Anti-Communist forces that fought the Bolsheviks in the Russian Civil War (1917–1922/3) and, to a lesser extent, continued operating as militarized associations both outside and within Russian borders until roughly the Second World War. Remnants and continuations of the movement, some of which only had narrow support, endured within the wider White émigré community until after the fall of communism.
Structure and ideology[]
In the Russian context, White had three main connotations:
- Political contra-distinction to the Reds, whose revolutionary Red Army supported the Bolshevik government;
- Historical reference to absolute monarchy, specifically united under Russia’s first Tsar, Ivan III (1462–1505), styled “Albus Rex” (“White King”); and
- Some White Army soldiers wore the white uniforms of Imperial Russia.
Ideology[]
The White movement were chiefly opponents of the Red Army.[3] They said they would bring law and order and the salvation of Russia, fighting against traitors, barbarians, and murderers.[4] They often acted in response to previous Red aggression and worked to remove Soviet organizations and functionaries in White-controlled territory.[5]
Overall, the White Army was nationalistic[3] and rejected ethnic particularism and separatism.[4] The White Army generally believed in a united multinational Russia, and opposed separatists who wanted to create nation-states instead of the Tsarist Russian Empire. Amongst White Army members, anti-Semitism was widespread.[3] Western sponsors were dismayed at this, especially as the Bolsheviks had prohibited anti-Semitism and appeared more progressive. Winston Churchill personally warned General Denikin, whose forces effected pogroms against the Jews, that
"my task in winning support in Parliament for the Russian Nationalist cause will be infinitely harder if well-authenticated complaints continue to be received from Jews in the zone of the Volunteer Armies."[6]
Many of the White leaders were conservative. They accepted autocracy while being suspicious of "politics" (which they characterized as consisting of speeches, elections, and party activities).[3]
Aside from being anti-Bolshevik[4] and patriotic, the Whites had no set ideology or main leader.[3] The White Armies did acknowledge a single provisional head of state, the so-called Supreme Governor of Russia, but this post was prominent only under the leadership of Alexander Kolchak.
The movement had no set plan for foreign policy; Whites differed on policies toward Germany, debating whether or not to ally with it. The Whites wanted to keep from alienating any potential supporters and allies, and thus saw an exclusively monarchist position as a detriment to their cause and recruitment. White movement leaders such as Anton Denikin advocated for Russians to create their own government, claiming the military could not decide in Russians’ steads.[3] Admiral Alexander Kolchak succeeded in creating a temporary wartime government in Omsk, acknowledged by most other White leaders, only for it to fall with the loss of his armies.
Some warlords who were aligned with the White movement, such as Grigory Semyonov and Roman Ungern von Sternberg, did not acknowledge any authority but their own. Consequently, the White movement had no set political leanings: members could be monarchists, republicans,[3] rightists, Kadets, etc.[7] Among White Army leaders, neither General Lavr Kornilov nor General Anton Denikin were monarchists, yet General Pyotr Nikolayevich Wrangel was a monarchist willing to soldier for an elected, democratic Russian government. Moreover, other political parties supported the anti-Bolshevik White Army, among them the democrats, the Socialist-Revolutionary Party, and others who opposed the Bolshevik October Revolution of Lenin. But, depending on the time and place, those White Army supporters also exchanged right-wing allegiance for allegiance with the Red Army.
Structure[]
Of the various and disparate White forces, the most important and largest was the Volunteer Army in South Russia.[3] Starting off as a small and well-organized military in January 1918, the Volunteer Army soon grew. The Kuban Cossacks joined the White Army, and conscription of both peasants and Cossacks began. In late February 1918, 4,000 soldiers under the command of General Aleksei Kaledin were forced to retreat from Rostov-on-Don due to the advance of the Red Army. In what was known as the Ice March, they traveled to Kuban in order to unite with the Kuban Cossacks (most of whom did not support the Volunteer Army.) In March, 3,000 men under the command of General Viktor Pokrovsky joined the Volunteer Army, increasing its membership to 6,000, and by June to 9,000. In 1919, the Don Cossacks joined and the Army began drafting Ukrainian peasants. In that year, between May and October, the Volunteer Army grew from 64,000 to 150,000 soldiers and was better supplied than its Red counterpart.[7] The White Army’s rank-and-file comprised active anti-Bolsheviks, such as Cossacks, nobles, and peasants, as conscripts and volunteers.
The White movement’s leaders and first members[7] were mainly military officers. Many came from outside the nobility, such as generals Mikhail Alekseev and Anton Denikin, who were from serf families; or Lavr Kornilov, who was a Cossack. The White generals never mastered administration;[3] they often utilized “prerevolutionary functionaries” or “military officers with monarchististic inclinations” for administering White-controlled regions[5]
The White Armies were often lawless and disordered.[4] Also, White-controlled territories had multiple different and varying currencies with unstable exchange rates. The chief currency, the Volunteer Army’s ruble, had no gold backing.[7]
Theatres of operation[]
The Whites and the Reds fought the Russian Civil War from November 1917 until 1921, and isolated battles continued in the Far East until 1923. The White Army—aided by the Allied forces (Triple Entente) from countries such as Japan, the United Kingdom, France, Italy and the United States and (sometimes) the Central Powers forces such as Germany and Austria-Hungary, fought in Siberia, Ukraine, and the Crimea. They were defeated by the Red Army due to military and ideological disunity, as well as the determination and increasing unity of the Red Army.
The main White Army war theatres were:
- The Southern front: Started on November 15, 1917 (creation officially announced on December 27 [both O.S.]) by General Mikhail Alekseev and commanded by General Lavr Kornilov, later headed by General Denikin and named the "Armed Forces of the South of Russia". The Southern Front featured massive-scale operations and was the most dangerous threat to the Bolshevik Government. At first, it was based entirely upon volunteers in Russia proper, mostly the Cossacks, among the first to oppose the Bolshevik Government. In 1919, after General Denikin’s attack upon Moscow failed, the Armed Forces of the South of Russia retreated. On March 26 and March 27, 1920 the remnants of the Volunteer Army were evacuated from Novorossiysk to the Crimea, where they merged with the army of Pyotr Wrangel.
- The Eastern (Siberian) front: Started in spring 1918, as a secret movement among army officers and right-wing socialist forces. In that front, they launched an attack in collaboration with the Czechoslovak Legions (then stranded in Siberia by the Bolshevik Government who barred them from leaving Russia) and the Japanese, who also intervened to help the Whites in the east. Admiral Alexander Kolchak headed that counter-revolutionary army and a provisional Russian government; despite some significant success in 1919, they were defeated and repelled to far eastern Russia, where they continued fighting until October 1922. When the Japanese withdrew, the Soviet army of the Far Eastern Republic retook the territory. The Civil War was officially declared over, although the Ayano-Maysky District was still controlled by Anatoly Pepelyayev at that time. Pepelyayev's Yakut Revolt, which concluded on June 16, 1923, was the last military action in Russia by the White Army. It ended with the defeat of the final anti-communist enclave in the country, and signaled the end of all military hostilities relating to the Russian Civil War.
- On June 23, 1918 the Volunteer Army (8,000-9,000 men) began its so called Second Kuban Campaign with support from Pyotr Krasnov. By September, the Volunteer Army was composed of 30,000-35,000 members, thanks to mobilization of the Kuban Cossacks gathered in the North Caucasus. Thus, the Volunteer Army took the name of the Caucasus Volunteer Army.
- On January 23, 1919 the Volunteer Army took the name and Denikin oversaw the defeat of the 11th Soviet Army and capture of the North Caucasus region. After capturing Donbass, Tsaritsyn and Kharkov in June, Denikin's forces surrounded Moscow on July 3 (N.S.). The plan was for 40,000 fighters, under the command of General Vladimir May-Mayevsky to storm the city.
- The Northern and North-Western fronts: Headed by Nikolai Yudenich, Evgeni Miller, and Anatoly Lieven, were less co-ordinated than General Denikin’s Army of Southern Russia. The Northwestern Army was allied with Estonia, and Lieven's troops with the Baltic nobility. Adventurers led by Pavel Bermondt-Avalov and Stanisław Bułak-Bałachowicz played a role as well. The most notable operation in the front was Operation White Sword against the Russian capital of Petrograd.
Post–Civil War[]
The defeated anti-Bolshevik Russians went into exile, congregating in Belgrade, Berlin, Paris, Harbin, Istanbul, and Shanghai. They established military and cultural networks that lasted through the Second World War (1939–45), e.g., the Russian community in Harbin and the Russian community in Shanghai). Afterward, the White Russians’ anti-Communist activities established a home base in the United States, where numerous refugees emigrated.
Moreover, in the 1920s and the 1930s, the White Movement established organisations outside of Russia, which were meant to depose the Soviet Government with guerrilla warfare, e.g., the Russian All-Military Union, the Brotherhood of Russian Truth, and the National Alliance of Russian Solidarists, a far-right anticommunist organization founded in 1930 by a group of young White emigres in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Some white émigrés adopted pro-Soviet sympathies and were termed "Soviet patriots". These people formed organizations such as the Mladorossi, the Evraziitsi, and the Smenovekhovtsi. A Russian cadet corps was established to prepare the next generation of anti-Communists for the “spring campaign” — a hopeful term denoting a renewed military campaign to reconquer Russia from the Soviet Government. In any event, many cadets volunteered to fight for the Russian Corps during the Second World War, when some White Russians participated in the Russian Liberation Movement.
After the war, active anti-Soviet combat was almost exclusively continued by the National Alliance of Russian Solidarists: other organizations either dissolved, or began concentrating exclusively on self-preservation and/or educating the youth. Various youth organizations, such as the Russian Scouts-in-Exteris became functional in raising children with a background in pre-Soviet Russian culture and heritage.
Some supported Albania's King Zog during the 1920s, and a few independently served with Francisco Franco's Nationalists during the Spanish Civil War. White Russians also served alongside the Soviet Red Army during the Soviet Invasion of Xinjiang and the Xinjiang War (1937).
Prominent people[]
- Alexander Kolchak
- Mikhail Alekseyev
- Lavr Kornilov
- Anton Denikin
- Pyotr Nikolayevich Wrangel
- Nikolai Yudenich
- Evgeny Miller
- Alexey Kaledin
- Mikhail Drozdovsky
- Mikhail Diterikhs
- Alexander Dutov
- Stanisław Bułak-Bałachowicz
- Pavel Bermondt-Avalov
- Ivan Ilyin
- Nikolai Ruzsky
- Vladimir Kappel
- Pyotr Krasnov
- Alexander Kutepov
- Mikhail Kvetsinsky
- Anatoly Lieven
- Sergey Markov
- Vladimir May-Mayevsky
- Konstantin Mamontov
- Viktor Pokrovsky
- Aleksandr Rodzyanko
- Grigory Semyonov
- Andrei Shkuro
- Roman Ungern von Sternberg
See also[]
- Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War
- White émigré
- Russian All-Military Union
- Basmachi movement
- Estonian War of Independence
- Finnish Civil War
- Great Siberian Ice March
- Czechoslovak Legions
- Italian Legione Redenta
- 1st Infantry Brigade (South Africa)
- White Terror (Russia)
References[]
- ↑ Sven Anders Hedin, Folke Bergman (1944). History of the expedition in Asia, 1927-1935, Part 3. Stockholm: Göteborg, Elanders boktryckeri aktiebolag. pp. 113-115. Retrieved 2010-11-28..
- ↑ Great Britain. Foreign Office (1997). British documents on foreign affairs--reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print: From 1940 through 1945. Asia, Part 3. University Publications of America. p. 401. ISBN 1-55655-674-8. Retrieved 2010-10-28.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 Kenez, Peter, "The Ideology of the White Movement," Soviet Studies, 1980, no. 32. pp. 58-83. Cite error: Invalid
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tag; name "Lazarski" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ 5.0 5.1 Viktor G. Bortnevski, “White Administration and White Terror (The Denikin Period),” Russian Review, Vol. 52, No. 3 (Jul., 1993), pp. 354-366. Cite error: Invalid
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External links[]
- Anti-Bolshevik Russia in pictures
- Museum and Archives of the White Movement
- (Russian) Memory and Honour Association
- (Russian) History of the White Movement
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